brudgers 14 hours ago

If you are looking for a job, looking for a job is the simplest thing that might work.

It also involves the most work and involves the most risk of rejection…things we are often wired to avoid.

You have to get way down the road before failing a Leet Code problem is even possible. And six months of grinding on professional networking are much more likely to bear fruit. Both in the short term and in the long term because Leet Code is neither work experience, nor knowing someone.

In addition, there is a tendency to approach Leet Code as “level two fizz-buzz” based on the examples. That’s not how companies are likely to use it. Instead, they test candidate code with “interesting size data” so that “fizzy-buzzy” solutions fall over. Just as they will in production.

Maybe that’s not you…but if Leet Code problems don’t look like what you do daily at work or something you struggled against in a class that used “interesting size data” grinding may not get you anywhere. Except avoiding the rejection and networking of a job search. Good luck.

Magma7404 16 hours ago

I never had that kind of exercise during an interview. Is it still happening nowadays?

  • JohnFen 16 hours ago

    Like you, I've never personally experienced that sort of thing either, but have heard that, yes, it's still a thing amongst a certain set of companies.